Wednesday, December 14, 2011

15 Incredible Escape Tools Made by Prison Inmates

Sitting in a cell day after day with no tools and no access to the outside world would makes it very difficult to be creative, one might think. Yet there is no end to man's creativity, and inmates in prison are no exception. Marc Steinmetz is a superb photographer who spent some time in the late '90s photographing these tools that inmates many made for escapes. Above, for example, is a radio receiver found in an encyclopedia in the prison library.

Confiscated in the therapy section of Hohenasperg prison, this ingenious device was made using a coat hanger and a jigsaw blade to make a saw. Perhaps giving inmates jigsaws to work with is not the best idea. Or at least count all the blades at the end.

We've all heard about the escape ropes made from bed sheets, but few of us have ever seen the real thing. This one is 16 meters long and made with dish towels as well as sheets. It was used in an escape attempt from the 'Santa Fu' jail in Hamburg, Germany. One man fell and the other one got to the roof; its seems he was climbing the wrong direction!

Not only was an inmate at Wolfenbuettel prison ingenious in the design of this catapult, he also had an ingenious excuse! It was a piece of art called the Dachsund! Needless to say, this was not believed and the device was confiscated in 1991.

This was more than just ingenious; it worked as well! A shotgun made of iron bedposts. The charge came from lead in curtain tape and was set off by AA batteries. Prisoners took a hostage, fired at a pane of glass and broke out into a waiting car on May 21, 1984.

Hopefully used just as a way to heat up clandestine food and drink and not a way to harm someone, this is a homemade toaster/grill and stove found in the mid '80s and made from a broken heating rod, tinfoil and wire.

A grappling hook with an overall length of four and half meters, it had 13 segments and was made from extension rods and leather rope. It facilitated an escape in Ludwigsburg prison on August 19, 1987, with the prisoners getting over two walls.

If you ever want to stash contraband, there aren't many better places than a hollowed out part of your false leg. A prisoner in 'Santa Fu' prison in Germany used it to smuggle narcotics in and out until the guards took a look in 1984.

Inmates are also known to get into serious gang and other territorial fights. One of the nastier recycled toys here is a knuckle duster made from a rasp and padded on one side, found in 1993 in Wolfenbuettel prison.

A prisoner looking to escape the reality of his situation, if not the bricks and mortar themselves, made a hash pipe out of an empty tube of horseradish. Marc Steinmetz points out that the range of smoking implements made by prisoners is equal only to their creative imaginations.

Alcohol is rarely served by the powers that be in prisons but that doesn't stop inmates from finding ways to make their own! This was an immersion heater used with mashed fermented fruit to make moonshine.

One of the most horrifying implements out of this group, it was a weapon hidden in a home made wooden crucifix. The shiv (homemade knife) was clearly a weapon either for a hostage taking or to be used against another inmate. Crucifixes were common in wood working prison shops until it was realized that they hid some very unpleasant surprises.